Petruccelli forces Massport to fund Logan Airport health study

The funding that had been cut for the state’s health study that would once and for all shed light onto how Logan International Airport is affecting the health of East Bostonians has been re-established legislatively by Senator Anthony Petruccelli —and the best part is, he’s making Massport foot the bill.

Due to state budget cuts to local earmarks funding the $1.3 million health study, which was Petruccelli’s first piece of legislation when he was a state representative back in 2001, was cut with about $200,000 left to go. Residents and local environmental activists waiting to finally see the results of the study by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (DPH) cried foul when funding was cut in the last two years’ state budgets.

Petruccelli was also very disappointed and vowed to figure out a way to get the study past the goal line.

“This (legislation) has been my baby for nearly a decade,” said Petruccelli. “It’s clear we’ve made great efforts to correct the impacts and dangers we can see and hear at Logan but it’s those impacts that are invisible that have always concerned me.”

According to Petruccelli’s legislation, Massport will pay the final $195,000 to complete the study.

Already bits and pieces of the study were leaked to the media. Last year, a rough draft of the DPH study suggested Logan is making residents sick and killing scores of residents here and in surrounding communities.

This of course came as no surprise to people living here who didn’t need a report to prove what residents have been saying all along. However, the new data obtained by WBZ two years ago helped drive home the point.

State health data obtained by the station showed that compared with the statewide average, there are elevated rates of heart disease in Everett, Hull, Malden, Lynn, Medford and Saugus. Asthma rates are also higher in Boston, Chelsea, Everett, Lynn and Revere.

“But it’s what was found in the neighborhoods of East Boston that really caught the attention of Suzanne Condon of the state Health Department,” WBZ reported. “And it’s this simple fact: Lung cancer rates are higher the closer you get to the airport.”

Condon, the lead investigator, told the station that smoking is probably not the cause.

But it’s the callous statement by Massport at the time that really had residents peeved. A spokesperson for the Port Authority said “the city of Boston, as well as major highways, also contribute to air pollution and that may be another explanation for the elevated number of diseases in the five-mile area” and not the airport as the sole contributor.

However, Massport could not explain other diseases directly related to specific toxins in jet fuel.

In 2004 the East Boston Times first reported a link between Logan and the unusually high cluster of Multiple Sclerosis (MS) cases in East Boston and Winthrop. Xenobiotic exposure, or exposure to environmental toxins is found in jet fuel.

A former East Boston resident discovered the link while researching the high number of people living with MS in East Boston and Winthrop and submitted her findings to the DPH. All the people studied had two things in common–they were diagnosed with MS and lived under or near Logan’s approach and departure paths.

Robin Dolan, who has been living with MS since 1992, completed the five years of extensive scientific research into the probable cause(s) of MS in East Boston and Winthrop and hopes her study will raise the state’s awareness of the high occurrences of the disease in these areas.

While she admits that her MS study may not be the smoking gun that Logan expansion opponents are seeking, Dolan is content with bringing the outbreak of MS in East Boston and Winthrop to the forefront.

“I have been told not to expect admittance of guilt,” she said. “I just would like awareness that MS may be caused by a state agencies (Massport). The DPH should show sincere concern for, and want to protect, the health of the citizens of Massachusetts. When I get receipt that the study was received by the DPH, even if I never hear from them, I and others will know they know.”

Twenty- four individuals with MS from East Boston and Winthrop participated in Dolan’s study but since the completion of her research 10 more people with MS from East Boston that were not part of the original study have come forward, bringing the number of known cases in the area to 34.

“Given the minimum number of 34 people having MS from the areas of East Boston/Winthrop, an unequal burden of disease is in question,” she said. “Environment statistically appears to play at least a 70 percent role in the risk of development of the condition.”

“We are talking about my neighbor, my classmate, people in very close proximity to each other. For a small community to be sharing a disease that doesn’t make the Nation Institute of Health’s (NIH) top category of illnesses is odd. If you look at the aerial view, you will see how much is consumed by the airport and how the cases of MS surround the airport.”

According to Dolan the affects of an airport are felt seven miles in radius and the closer proximity means the greatest impact, but where the impact truly ends is uncertain.

“Bottom line is that we live in a very industrial world and receive an onslaught of foreign materials each and every day,” she said. “In my reading on the history of East Boston and Logan Airport it became apparent that Massport has been given leniency for decades regarding East Boston and its residents.”

As Massport goes forward with it’s plans to once again expand Logan with centerfield taxiway, Dolan is saddened by the affects it may pose.

“The airport took away the beauty of East Boston,” she said. “What I see now is that no one understood, or had the capacity to understand, that not only would their rights to enjoy living be taken away in walks or picnics or swimming or ball games or whatever, but in addition their rights to a healthy, carefree life would be as well.”

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